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Professor of Public International Law Dan Sarooshi is also a Fellow of the Queen's College, Oxford. He was elected in 2008 to membership of the Executive Council of the American Society of International Law. His books include International Organizations and Their Exercise of Sovereign Powers (OUP, 2005), The UN and the Development of Collective Security (OUP, 1999), and the co-edited State Responsibility Before International Judicial Institutions (Hart, 2004). The first two of these books have been awarded the 2000 (biennial) Guggenheim Prize by the Guggenheim Foundation in Switzerland; the 2001 American Society of International Law Book Prize; the 2006 Myres S. McDougal Prize awarded by the American Society for the Policy Sciences; and the 2006 American Society of International Law Book Prize. Professor Sarooshi has co-authored with President and Judge Rosalyn Higgins DBE, FBA, QC of the International Court of Justice, the piece entitled ‘Institutional Modes of Conflict Management’ in National Security Law (2005) (108 pp.).
All | Recent | Selected Publications sorted by selection | sort by year D Sarooshi, International Organizations and Their Exercise of Sovereign Powers (Oxford Monographs in International Law Series) (OUP 2007) Other notes:This 2005 hardback edition of this book was awarded the 2006 Myres S. McDougal Prize by the American Society for Policy Sciences, and also the 2006 American Society of International Law book prize (Preeminent Contribution to Creative Scholarship). ISBN: 978-0-19-922577-4 D Sarooshi, 'The Peace and Justice Paradox: The International Criminal Court and the UN Security Council' in D. McGoldrick, P. Rowe and E. Donnelly (eds), The Permanent International Criminal Court (Hart Publishing 2004) D Sarooshi, 'The Essentially Contested Nature of the Concept of Sovereignty: Implications for the Exercise by International Organizations of Delegated Powers of Government' (2004) 25 Michigan Journal of International Law 1107-1140 D Sarooshi, 'The Future of the WTO and its Dispute Settlement System' (2005) 2(1) International Organizations Law Review 129-152 ISBN: 1572-3747 Correspondence address: The Queen's College, Oxford, |
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